If you are using a legal lease in your state (they vary state to state) you should have no legal issues arising from repeated lease renewals. Are you afraid of some sort of claim against the property if they live there too long? If you have a clear lease, you should have no legal issues whatsoever.
Evict him.
Georgia Moffett.
He is responsible for the remaining months. Neither party can terminate unilaterally - they have to agree. However, after the tenant leaves, the landlord has a responsibility to try to rent the unit.
only if the lease has a statement that your lease is automatically renewed unless the tenant does not wish same.
Three months
This should have been disclosed when the landlord performed the background check, before the lease was signed. Well, if the landlord had an application for an apartment to which the tenant denied having been evicted if there were questions that asked such, then the landlord can terminate the lease for the tenant having falsified the information given.
It is if the contract allows that.
Yes.
If a landlord has an objection to a tenant and wishes to evict that tenant then yes, he does have to inform the tenant in question about the objection. Tenants must be given an opportunity to remedy the problem rather than being evicted.
Certainly not.
The tenants who rented the house were asked to leave, because they had not been able to pay the rent for four months. Did you mean tenant or tenet?
Then the Tenant is considered a month to month renter. The Landlord or Tenant may change any terms of the deal with at least 6 months notice to either party.